Robert Nippoldt:
Picture "Casablanca", framed
Proportional view
Picture "Casablanca", framed
Robert Nippoldt:
Picture "Casablanca", framed

Quick info

ars mundi Exclusive Edition | limited, 199 copies | numbered | signed | reproduction, Giclée print on handmade paper | solid wood frame | passe-partout | glazed | size 49 x 39 cm

incl. tax plus Shipping

Product no. IN-764888.R1

Delivery time: Immediately deliverable

Frame variant
Picture "Casablanca", framed
Robert Nippoldt: Picture "Casablanca", framed

Detailed description

Picture "Casablanca", framed

In his Hollywood, Robert Nippoldt transforms Californian illusions into witty poster art. His brushstroke contrasts the breathy open spaces and allows the film stars to be experienced in an unusually close way. Nippoldt's graphics convey just as much glamour as necessary and at the same time as much privacy as possible - light and easy, with an almost amused smile that pleasantly grounds the stardom in his Hollywood edition.

Exclusively at ars mundi we offer this high-resolution Giclée print on high-quality handmade paper. Limited edition of 199 copies, signed and numbered. Sheet size 45 x 35 cm. Framed in a black solid wood frame with bevel cut passe-partout, dustproof glazed. Size 49 x 39 cm.

About Robert Nippoldt

Robert Nippoldt was born on 13 October 1977 in Kranenburg, Germany. After school, the judge's son briefly studied law before coming to Münster in the summer of 1999, where he studied graphic design and illustration at the University of Applied Sciences.

His diploma book "Gangster. Die Bosse von Chicago" fortunately found a publisher right away so that Nippoldt could concentrate on book art from then on. After two years of work, his second book, "Jazz. New York in the Roaring Twenties", was published in autumn 2007 and was voted by the Stiftung Buchkunst as "the most beautiful German book of 2007". "Hollywood in the 1930s" was published in 2010 and is his third book of the trilogy about America in the 20s & 30s.

His work has been shown in numerous exhibitions in Berlin, Darmstadt, Essen, Frankfurt, Leipzig and Munich, among others. When he is not snorkelling or trying to tune his guitar, he is probably drawing in his studio in Münster.

Recommendations